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>> i think there are sharper elbows than there used to be. the political debate has always been us. i think one of the problems here has been that with the rise of the tea party, and let's remember, it used to be democrats who had trouble with their liberal wing. out of that is the democratic leadership council. that brought you president bill clinton. there is an evolution of how these things work. i think she is right. at this point the understanding of congress is it is like homework. they work to the deadline every single time. maybe over the deadline, but they get it done. >> one thing to that point. candy is right. it is ever us, the political confrontation is usual. the way the tea party wing of the republican party is viewed abroad is in terms such as the taliban wing of the republican party. that is what the economists are calling it. it is not a rag. it is a conservative financially fiscally conservative body that is very concerned about the so-called extremist wing. in europe, even conservative parties are nowhere as near conservative as the republican party here. >> in t
>> i think there are sharper elbows than there used to be. the political debate has always been us. i think one of the problems here has been that with the rise of the tea party, and let's remember, it used to be democrats who had trouble with their liberal wing. out of that is the democratic leadership council. that brought you president bill clinton. there is an evolution of how these things work. i think she is right. at this point the understanding of congress is it is like homework....
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Nov 16, 2013
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nic robertson joins us from toronto. i hate to use hyperbole when i asked for a comment from a reporter covering a story but this is jaw-dropping it does not seem to be a day when there isn't a bizarre development. >> there was another bizarre twist here not just this idea of the process of stripping powers from him that could cost taxpayers a lot of money. clearly the defense they are trying to put up. his brother is also a counselor here. this whole idea that he will be left without any power, he is fighting that but the extraordinary thing was he stood there and said i was in your shoes i would do exactly the same thing. is in his shoes and he will do what he wants to do. he understands that it will go down as his own. >> as he has been doing up until now, if you can believe it. a reality tv show is in the office with his brother. joining us now from toronto is city councilor. this has been so unbelievable to watch and i am sorry that you're going through this. need to ask you what exactly were you able to do with the
nic robertson joins us from toronto. i hate to use hyperbole when i asked for a comment from a reporter covering a story but this is jaw-dropping it does not seem to be a day when there isn't a bizarre development. >> there was another bizarre twist here not just this idea of the process of stripping powers from him that could cost taxpayers a lot of money. clearly the defense they are trying to put up. his brother is also a counselor here. this whole idea that he will be left without any...
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joie thanks for joining us. the philippine government has been defending the pace of the relief effort, saying in a situation like this nothing is fast enough. from what you've seen is the relief effort adequate? has it been picking up? >> it is clearly a very difficult situation antonio. think about it. there are more than 7,000 islands in the philippines and a lot of these places are quite small quite remote and very hard to communicate with. juice short time ago, i met a woman and her daughter who had just come from an eastern province and she said for days our biggest hope was just to communicate with the outside world. we were okay, we wanted our family to know that we were okay, but we couldn't even tell that much, we couldn't get that message out to people because it out. it is equally difficult for information to come out even to the aid agencies through the nongovernmental operations or the governmental operations, for that matter. who are trying to help these folks. we are seeing a steady flow of aircr
joie thanks for joining us. the philippine government has been defending the pace of the relief effort, saying in a situation like this nothing is fast enough. from what you've seen is the relief effort adequate? has it been picking up? >> it is clearly a very difficult situation antonio. think about it. there are more than 7,000 islands in the philippines and a lot of these places are quite small quite remote and very hard to communicate with. juice short time ago, i met a woman and her...
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Nov 16, 2013
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all of us end up paying more, you know, even those of us in groups. if you are in a relatively small group, and an employer would say 100 or 150 people two or three or four of your employees get serious illnesses, the rates go up for everybody. that's the nature of insurance. and if you want to leave it to a jungle of an vid marketplace or let companies cherry pick the healthy and let the rest of us a much larger group pay a whole lot more, to pay for seriously sick instead of all of us in the same boat, rogue together, then can you have that. that's what we have had for 45 or 50 million people who haven't had any insurance, another 50 million who have had insurance and don't realize it's inadequate when they need it, it's not that good. >> we have this jungle, this very politicized debate in washington and now the mess with the website that's taken all the attention, all the oxygen out of the room, has that again really taken away focus about the real issue about figuring out how to provide health care to a lot of people who don't have it and who nee
all of us end up paying more, you know, even those of us in groups. if you are in a relatively small group, and an employer would say 100 or 150 people two or three or four of your employees get serious illnesses, the rates go up for everybody. that's the nature of insurance. and if you want to leave it to a jungle of an vid marketplace or let companies cherry pick the healthy and let the rest of us a much larger group pay a whole lot more, to pay for seriously sick instead of all of us in the...
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phil is with us. dr. phil, you had two high profile shows this week. >> we did. >> on a very serious subject. >> we did. we did. i did the interview with michelle knight, she was the first of ariel castro's kidnap victims to speak out. and you know i said on the show, she was the forgotten one. essentially. you know the three there. and she was the first taken. there the longest. after i met her, i remember i was kind of talking to the camera. i said -- three girls were taken. three girls were rescued. but only two girls went home. because she had no home. she had nowhere to go the she has just been kind of lost in the shuffle. with no choice. and she very much wanted to tell her story. i have to tell you it was an interview i kept having to remind myself to say something. because she was so compelling and blew up so many myths. what a courageous and brave young woman. >> jimmy: what an interview. how do you get an interview like that? i would imagine everybody wants to speak to her. >> they do. but i thi
phil is with us. dr. phil, you had two high profile shows this week. >> we did. >> on a very serious subject. >> we did. we did. i did the interview with michelle knight, she was the first of ariel castro's kidnap victims to speak out. and you know i said on the show, she was the forgotten one. essentially. you know the three there. and she was the first taken. there the longest. after i met her, i remember i was kind of talking to the camera. i said -- three girls were taken....
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Nov 16, 2013
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and he joins us now live from london. thank you, sir, for joining us. we appreciate your time this morning. we're going to circle backing to lady gaga. first, there are a lot of conspiracy theories how these stars died. what do you make of all of that? >> well, i think that's nonsense really. a great deal of rubbish has been written about these stars. but if we examine their lives, we find that their deaths are easily explicable and real tragedies that were happening because they were very unhappy, troubled people. >> and is that the common denominator, just their unhappiness? >> well, we see the six big stars, brian jones, jimi hendrix, janis joplin, jim morrison of the doors, kurt cobain, i'm i winehouse. if we trace their lives back to childhood as i do in my new book "27" we find they are difficult childhoods, difficult relationships with their parents, trouble with drink and drugs early in life, and they were unstable people with personality disorders that were all in place before they became famous. then they became famous overnight. and the press
and he joins us now live from london. thank you, sir, for joining us. we appreciate your time this morning. we're going to circle backing to lady gaga. first, there are a lot of conspiracy theories how these stars died. what do you make of all of that? >> well, i think that's nonsense really. a great deal of rubbish has been written about these stars. but if we examine their lives, we find that their deaths are easily explicable and real tragedies that were happening because they were...
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Nov 16, 2013
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alexandra field is live for us at princeton. alexandra, what are government officials doing, to what extent are they trying to make the vaccine available? >> reporter: they're talking about a few solutions. as you know, there's no meningitis "b" vaccine allowed in this country. there is one in use in australia and in europe. now the fda has cleared one major hurdle that could bring that vaccine to princeton where there have been seven confirmed cases. the fda says the vaccine could be imported and reach the campus as part of a drug trial program, but it is up to the university to decide whether or not they want to have the vaccine here. that's something that trustees are discussing this weekend. we asked students whether they might be interested in using that vaccine if it came here, and here is what they had to say. >> i think i would first see what they decide and then kind of do more research on my own. >> i trust the vaccine, as long as it is approved in europe and australia, gives me confidence in the fact that it works i g
alexandra field is live for us at princeton. alexandra, what are government officials doing, to what extent are they trying to make the vaccine available? >> reporter: they're talking about a few solutions. as you know, there's no meningitis "b" vaccine allowed in this country. there is one in use in australia and in europe. now the fda has cleared one major hurdle that could bring that vaccine to princeton where there have been seven confirmed cases. the fda says the vaccine...
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Nov 16, 2013
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they were his words used. and now people, there are an awfulle lot of americans, based on recent polling that they're not even sure whether he means what he says when he says he's going to fix it. the president, by the way, didn't even mention health care in his weekly address today. so do you get a sense, too, that the president, or the white house is feeling very defeated about this. and they may not even know if they can really fix it. >> well, i think you're right. there are two problems here. one is the technical issue that there is no excuse for it. they didn't get the website right. they wrote a law that allowed 16 different websites to be created. hundreds of millions of dollars. that's the federal one and 15 state ones. and they got that wrong. there's a private sector set of website that they could be used for free without paying the taxpayer. and he's not choosing those private websites. full disclosure. one is my client ehealth.com. the technical problem sun forgivable. you ought to be angry the sa
they were his words used. and now people, there are an awfulle lot of americans, based on recent polling that they're not even sure whether he means what he says when he says he's going to fix it. the president, by the way, didn't even mention health care in his weekly address today. so do you get a sense, too, that the president, or the white house is feeling very defeated about this. and they may not even know if they can really fix it. >> well, i think you're right. there are two...
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Nov 16, 2013
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mom: well, i use bounty... kerri: ooo! use sparkle®... it's just right for cleaning up everyday little messes without cleaning out your piggy bank. sparkle®. the bright way to clean. i'll call you in a little bit. google... how do i get home? getting directions. [ female announcer ] it balances you... it fills you with energy... and it gives you what you are looking for to live a more natural life. in a convenient two bar pack. this is nature valley. nature at its most delicious. >>> julian lennon grew up in the spotlight. he is the son of john lennon and wife cynthia. his career began on a high note beginning with a platinum record. now he's back with his fifth full-length studio album, first in 15 years titled "everything changes." we're honored to have him here in studio 57. welcome. >> thank you, likewise. >> you fell in love with photography along the way. >> yes. >> what happen? >> i don't know. it's another creative outlet i truly embraced and i've gone on to do some incredible work. >> you love taking pictures from planes. >> yes
mom: well, i use bounty... kerri: ooo! use sparkle®... it's just right for cleaning up everyday little messes without cleaning out your piggy bank. sparkle®. the bright way to clean. i'll call you in a little bit. google... how do i get home? getting directions. [ female announcer ] it balances you... it fills you with energy... and it gives you what you are looking for to live a more natural life. in a convenient two bar pack. this is nature valley. nature at its most delicious. >>>...
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on the other side, you can give us a thought on that. will cane, lamont hill, caved gergen back with me. we're going to talk about president obama's second term. what is next? it hasn't been smooth sailing but what does this do to his legacy? more when we come back. [ female announcer ] we eased your back pain... ♪ ready or not. [ female announcer ] ...so you can be up there. here i come! [ female announcer ] ...down there, around there... and under there for him. tylenol® provides strong pain relief and won't irritate your stomach the way aleve® or even advil® can. but for everything we do, we know you do so much more. tylenol®. where their electricity comes from. they flip the switch-- and the light comes on. it's our job to make sure that it does. using natural gas this power plant can produce enough energy for about 600,000 homes. generating electricity that's cleaner and reliable, with fewer emissions-- it matters. ♪ supposed to be president obama's big legacy. but now it seems like it's a big nightmare. the president didn't
on the other side, you can give us a thought on that. will cane, lamont hill, caved gergen back with me. we're going to talk about president obama's second term. what is next? it hasn't been smooth sailing but what does this do to his legacy? more when we come back. [ female announcer ] we eased your back pain... ♪ ready or not. [ female announcer ] ...so you can be up there. here i come! [ female announcer ] ...down there, around there... and under there for him. tylenol® provides strong...
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he joins us live from ormoc. >> thank you for being with us this morning. i understand you have travelled from behal to ormoc. how are the challenges different in each place? >> good morning. thank you. the challenges are a little similar, but with the devastation being so recent in orm ormoc, the need is greater. ormoc was hit by a tidal surge like that intercepted in tacloban. where i went today, i saw thousands of homes that were damaged and you could count on one hand how many homes i saw were not damaged. the numbers here are much greater than we thought, but honestly, i have a thing where if your house is 100% destroyed - it doesn't matter if your neighbours are or not. the need is great. the emergency is great. it's a dissolving situation. now emergency supplies are piling up. there's food and water shortages will end. the next face is all hands - looking at the recovery. >> you mentioned you can count on one hand the number of homes that were not damaged. so what are survivors needing most now, and what about the basics like electricity, running wat
he joins us live from ormoc. >> thank you for being with us this morning. i understand you have travelled from behal to ormoc. how are the challenges different in each place? >> good morning. thank you. the challenges are a little similar, but with the devastation being so recent in orm ormoc, the need is greater. ormoc was hit by a tidal surge like that intercepted in tacloban. where i went today, i saw thousands of homes that were damaged and you could count on one hand how many...
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he's on the phone with us from nashville. good to have you with us. first question for you, meningitis "b," this is a very unusual form of this disease, right? >> it is victor, yes. usually, when you see this kind of meningitis on a campus, it's meningitis "c." so this is very, very unusual. and of course, meningitis "b" is not in the vaccine that we currently use. that's why they have to go abroad to get a vaccine that has been used in europe and australia. >> so do we know why this thing is unusual? it has not affected the faculty at princeton. it seems it's only the college students that are becoming infected, do we know why? >> we don't, and isn't that curious, zoraida. and you know, this also a disease that occasionally occurs more frequently just in the state of oregon in the united states. and we've never understood that either. so, why this is occurring is not clear. but the trick that everybody's working on now, the cdc, the new jersey department of health, the folks at princeton, is how to stop it. how to prevent further cases. >> so, there'
he's on the phone with us from nashville. good to have you with us. first question for you, meningitis "b," this is a very unusual form of this disease, right? >> it is victor, yes. usually, when you see this kind of meningitis on a campus, it's meningitis "c." so this is very, very unusual. and of course, meningitis "b" is not in the vaccine that we currently use. that's why they have to go abroad to get a vaccine that has been used in europe and australia....